Humes v. Fritz Companies, Inc.

105 P.3d 1000, 125 Wash. App. 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 31, 2005
DocketNo. 53349-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 105 P.3d 1000 (Humes v. Fritz Companies, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humes v. Fritz Companies, Inc., 105 P.3d 1000, 125 Wash. App. 477 (Wash. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

¶1 — Kenneth Humes sued the defendants for an injury he suffered outside the Tulalip Indian Reservation casino. At the time of the injury, Joe Crowder was driving a truck for Fritz Companies and Humes was operating a crane. Humes loaded a container onto Crowder’s truck, and Crowder began to drive his truck away before anyone could detach the cable of the crane from the container. The truck pulled on the crane cables and lifted the crane off its rear. Humes jumped out of the crane cab in fear that the truck would pull the crane end-over-end. Crowder stopped his truck before any damage would have happened to Humes inside the crane cabin. But Humes broke his leg when he landed on the asphalt of the casino’s parking lot.

Coleman, J.

¶2 Humes sued Crowder and Fritz (the Fritz defendants). On pretrial motions for partial summary judgment, the trial court held that the trier of fact could not allocate fault for Humes’ injury to the Tulalip Tribes (the Tribe) and that Humes was not contributorily negligent. At trial, the court included a “duty to see” instruction in the jury instructions. The court did not instruct on contributory negligence, and it gave an instruction on proximate causation that did not specifically allow for consideration of Humes’ jump as an independent, intervening cause of his injury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Humes. Following denial of their motion for a new trial, the Fritz defendants appeal.

[482]*482¶3 We conclude that the Tribe’s sovereign immunity does not bar the allocation of fault to the Tribe. Furthermore, the actions of the casino’s maintenance director raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the Tribe retained control of the workplace. We therefore reverse the trial court’s partial summary judgment that the trier of fact could not allocate fault to the Tribe.

¶4 The trial court correctly granted partial summary judgment for Humes on the issue of contributory negligence, as no reasonable jury could find that Humes acted unreasonably in the face of an emergency. For the same reason, the trial court did not err in refusing to instruct on contributory negligence. Additionally, the trial court did not err in submitting a “duty to see” instruction under the factual circumstances presented. The trial court’s proximate causation instruction was adequate, as Humes’ jump was a foreseeable result of Crowder’s actions and therefore did not constitute an independent, intervening cause of his injury.

FACTS

¶5 In April 2000, Kenneth Humes was operating a crane at the Tulalip Casino on the Tulalip Indian Reservation near Marysville, Washington. The casino management wanted containers moved from one area of the casino parking lot to another. The company that leased the containers to the casino hired Fritz Companies to supply two trucks with drivers. The casino hired Humes’ employer, Shaffer Crane & Equipment, to supply a crane and a crane operator for loading the containers onto the trucks and unloading them at the destination.

¶6 Shaffer assigned Humes to the job and provided a 40-ton mobile crane for Humes’ use. During operations, Humes sat in a glass-and-frame cabin at the base of the crane boom. He loaded and unloaded six containers without any problem. When he loaded the seventh container onto Crowder’s truck, Crowder began to drive his truck away [483]*483before anyone disconnected the cables of the crane. The truck pulled on the crane cables and lifted the crane off its rear. Humes jumped out of the crane cabin in fear that the crane would be pulled completely over its front end. He suffered a broken leg when he landed on the ground. The truck stopped before the crane was pulled over.

¶7 An official from the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) investigated the incident later that day. An L&I inspection report quotes Crowder as saying that his action was a “conditioned reaction.” According to the report, the direct cause of the injury was Crowder’s act of driving away. The report also states that an indirect cause of the accident was the fact that Humes jumped out of his crane cabin. The report states that “equipment operators [normally] ride the equipment as it falls over. The protection the cab offers versus the possibility of having the equipment roll over the operator is the reason why operators don’t jump out of the equipment.”

¶8 Humes brought a personal injury suit against Crowder and Fritz Companies. The Fritz defendants asserted multiple affirmative defenses, including the fault of others and contributory negligence of Humes.

f9 Cornelius Green, Jr., the casino’s maintenance director, was deposed during the discovery phase of the action. Green stated that the Tribe owned the Tulalip Casino and that the Tribe wanted the containers moved. He stated that before operations started, “[t]he crane operator, the truck drivers and myself got together and got a basic game plan on how we were going to proceed.” When asked who ran the meeting, Green replied, [484]*484Green also stated that he expected Greg Shaffer of Shaffer Crane & Equipment to provide a rigger to connect and disconnect the crane cables and the containers. When Shaffer did not provide a rigger, Green decided that he and casino technician Jeff Lyle would act as riggers. Green also decided he was responsible for making eye contact with the truck driver and motioning for the truck driver to go forward.

[483]*483I don’t know if anyone was running the meeting. As it being my project, I kind of pulled us together, but it was an open discussion, you know. The trucker kind of knew his business, the crane operator knew his business, and I let them. And I just made sure that we all three were on the same page. I’ve been around trucks and cranes all my life, but one thing I’ve learned is if they’re good at their jobs, you let them be.

[484]*484¶10 Humes stated during his deposition that he wasn’t sure who was in charge of the “lifting operation,” then said, “I guess Neil [Green] would be the one, Neil, the guy that was rigging for me. . . . He would be the one in charge of the whole operation.” Shaffer stated during his deposition that it was his understanding that Green was in charge of the project.

¶11 Green stated in his deposition that he heard Crowder say during the L&I inspection that the accident was his fault and that he drove away from Humes’ crane “on automatic.” Crowder, however, stated in his deposition that he could not remember whether he told the L&I official that he drove away under a conditioned reaction.

¶12 Green and Shaffer were asked whether Humes should have stayed in the crane cabin. Green said, “No” and stated, “I would have bailed.” Green was asked whether Humes would have been better off if he had stayed in the cab. Green said yes because the crane did not go over. He added:

But on the other side of that scenario, if the crane would have kept going, that cab was on the wrong side of the crane to get—it was on the right side of the crane to get smashed. It was on the wrong side of the crane to stay in it. He would have been a lot shorter when the episode was finished.

Later in the deposition, Green recalled watching the truck pull the crane off its rear. “We were just standing there like, that guy is taking off. I’m going to see some guy get killed right in front of me. That’s what I remember hearing— thinking, you know.”

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.3d 1000, 125 Wash. App. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humes-v-fritz-companies-inc-washctapp-2005.